No.
The best way would be to weigh it and then weigh out tenths. Otherwise you could note that 1 cup is 240 ml and one tenth of that is 24 ml. Since salt is not a liquid I think the weight idea works MUCH better.
The density of different salts differs, meaning that the weight of one cup is not the same for all types. One cup of Kosher salt generally weighs about 6.4 ounces.
As a dry measure the answer would be 8 ounces. If you want a weight it would depend on what type of salt you were to weigh, table salt, kosher salt, etc. I weighed a cup (8 ounces) of iodized table salt on my digital scale and it weighed 15.2 ounces.
one cup of salt will be equals to 273000.000 milligrams.
a cup of shelled pistachios can weigh anything because it depends how big the cup is
About 170 gm, or 6 ounces. To weigh 1 cup of corn kernels, get some scales and weigh the measuring cup. Then fill the measuring cup with corn kernels and weigh it again. Subtract the weight of the cup empty from the weight of the cup full and the answer you get will be the weight of one cup of corn kernel.
One cup is 8 liquid oz's If want to know how much one cup of walnuts weigh you will have to weigh them
Half of cup of butter is one "stick" and four sticks of butter weigh one pound. Thus, half of cup of butter weighs 4 ounces, or approximately 137 grams.
It will depend on how salty it is as the salt affects the density. 1 US cup = 236.588238 ml The density of pure water is exactly 1 gram per ml at 4 °C, and so 1 cup would weigh exactly 236.588238 g, or 8.345 oz (1 gram = 0.0352739619 ounces). The more salt you add, the higher the density, and the more 1 cup of salt water would weigh. Ocean water is only slightly more dense than pure water (approx. 1.026 grams per mL), although its density actually depends on how deep you are (it varies between 1.025 at the surface to 1.028 below 1000 meters). And so, to a close approximation 1 cup of ocean water would weigh 242.7 g, or 8.55 oz.
A cup of salt weighs approximately 250 gm.
250 gm of salt.